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TFTP(1)                          User's Manual                         TFTP(1)

NAME
       tftp - IPv4 Trivial File Transfer Protocol client

SYNOPSIS
       tftp [ options... ] [host [port]] [-c command]

DESCRIPTION
       tftp  is  a client for the Trivial file Transfer Protocol, which can be
       used to transfer files to and from remote machines, including some very
       minimalistic, usually embedded, systems.  The remote host may be speci-
       fied on the command line, in which case tftp uses host as  the  default
       host for future transfers (see the connect command below.)

OPTIONS
       -4     Connect with IPv4 only, even if IPv6 support was compiled in.

       -6     Connect with IPv6 only, if compiled in.

       -c command
              Execute  command  as  if it had been entered on the tftp prompt.
              Must be specified last on the command line.

       -l     Default to literal mode. Used to avoid special processing of ':'
              in a file name.

       -m mode
              Set  the  default  transfer  mode to mode.  This is usually used
              with -c.

       -R port:port
              Force the originating port number to be in the  specified  range
              of port numbers.

       -v     Default to verbose mode.

       -V     Print  the  version number and configuration to standard output,
              then exit gracefully.

COMMANDS
       Once tftp is running, it issues the prompt  tftp>  and  recognizes  the
       following commands:

       ? command-name...

       help command-name...
              Print help information

       ascii  Shorthand for mode ascii.

       binary Shorthand for mode binary.

       connect host [port]
              Set the host (and optionally port) for transfers.  Note that the
              TFTP protocol, unlike the FTP protocol, does not  maintain  con-
              nections  between  transfers; thus, the connect command does not
              actually create a connection, but merely remembers what host  is
              to  be  used  for transfers.  You do not have to use the connect
              command; the remote host can be specified as part of the get  or
              put commands.

       get file
       get remotefile localfile
       get file1 file2 file3...
              Get a file or set of files from the specified sources.  A remote
              filename can be in one of two forms: a  plain  filename  on  the
              remote host, if the host has already been specified, or a string
              of the form host:filename to specify both a host and filename at
              the  same  time.   If the latter form is used, the last hostname
              specified becomes the default for future transfers.  Enable lit-
              eral  mode  to  prevent  special  treatment of the ':' character
              (e.g. C:\dir\file).

       literal
              Toggle literal mode.   When  set,  this  mode  prevents  special
              treatment of ':' in filenames.

       mode transfer-mode
              Specify  the  mode  for  transfers;  transfer-mode may be one of
              ascii (or netascii) or binary (or octet.)  The default is ascii.

       put file
       put localfile remotefile
       put file1 file2 file3... remote-directory
              Put a file or set of files  to  the  specified  remote  file  or
              directory.   The destination can be in one of two forms: a file-
              name on the remote host, if the host has already been specified,
              or a string of the form host:filename to specify both a host and
              filename at the same time.  If the  latter  form  is  used,  the
              hostname specified becomes the default for future transfers.  If
              the remote-directory form is used, the remote host is assumed to
              be  a UNIX system or another system using / as directory separa-
              tor.  Enable literal mode to prevent special  treatment  of  the
              ':' character (e.g. C:\dir\file).

       quit   Exit tftp.  End-of-file will also exit.

       rexmt retransmission-timeout
              Set the per-packet retransmission timeout, in seconds.

       status Show current status.

       timeout total-transmission-timeout
              Set the total transmission timeout, in seconds.

       trace  Toggle packet tracing (a debugging feature.)

       verbose
              Toggle verbose mode.

NOTES
       The  TFTP  protocol  provides no provisions for authentication or secu-
       rity.  Therefore, the remote server will probably implement some  kinds
       of  access  restriction  or firewalling.  These access restrictions are
       likely to be site- and server-specific.

AUTHOR
       This version of tftp is maintained by H. Peter  Anvin  <hpa@zytor.com>.
       It  was  derived  from, but has substantially diverged from, an OpenBSD
       source base, with added patches by Markus Gutschke and Gero Kulhman.

SEE ALSO
       tftpd(8).

tftp-hpa 5.2                     23 July 2008                          TFTP(1)

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